Jannal Oram (transl. Window Side) is a 2013 Tamil-language road comedy thriller film directed by Karu Pazhaniappan[1] A remake of the 2012 Malayalam film, Ordinary, it stars Parthiban, Vimal, Vidharth, Ramana, Poorna and Manisha Yadav of Vazhakku Enn 18/9 fame.[2] The music was composed by Vidyasagar with cinematography by Arbhindu Saaraa and editing by Saravana. The story is set in Pannaikadu, a hillside village, with only one bus service to and from a nearby town, Palani.[3] The film released on 29 November 2013 to mixed reviews.

Jannal Oram
Promotional poster
Directed byKaru Pazhaniappan
Written bySugunakumar K. E. (Dialogues)
Screenplay byNishad K. Koya
Manu Prasad
Story bySugeeth
Sangeeth Kollam
Based onOrdinary
By Sugeeth
Produced byHemanth (Presenter)
K Murugan
StarringParthiban
Vimal
Vidharth
Ramana
Poorna
Manisha Yadav
CinematographyArbhindu Saaraa
Edited bySaravana
Music byVidyasagar
Production
company
Hemanth films
Distributed byHemanth films
Release date
  • 29 November 2013 (2013-11-29)
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

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Ka. Subbiah, from Cuddalore, is appointed in TNSTC as a bus conductor and is assigned PalaniPannaikadu route for his first posting. Pannaikadu is a picturesque small village inside a forest with a small local population, many of whom travel daily to Palani for work. Situated near the reservoir of a dam, the village charms him, and he quickly adapts to his new life. He befriends the locals and falls in love with a native of the village, Kalyani.

Everything goes well for him, until one fateful day, the bus breaks down en route to Pannaikadu. The passengers are provided with alternative transport and servicemen are called in for the repairs. The bus driver Karuppu, gets drunk with the Senior Bus Repair Mechanic friend during the repairs, making him unable to drive. Subbiah has to replace him to take the bus back to Pannaikadu, although unauthorized to do so. The dim lighting of the evening, fog and distractions from his conversations with Karuppu makes him late to see a person standing on road. The brakes are applied too late, and the bus presumably hits him. In the panic of the situation and unable to think straight, they send the bleeding victim in a pickup truck that arrived soon after. They lie about the accident, claiming it to be a hit-and-run, while the driver takes him to hospital. One of the bags of the victim gets misplaced and they take it with them.

Guilt-ridden, Subbiah and Karuppu search the victim's bag and recognize him to be Siva – the son of Vinayagam "Annan sir" (a retired well-respected school headmaster and Pannaikadu panchayat member) and the fiancé of Nirmala David, his childhood friend. He works in Surat, Gujarat and is to be married during his current visit. They search for him the next day in the hospitals, but is staggered to know that he is not admitted anywhere. Two days later, the police find his corpse at the bottom of hill, seemingly jumped off of the cliff. Without any other leads, the police believe it to be a suicide, but the two know otherwise. Subbiah wishes to confess, but is prevented by Karuppu, as his sister's marriage is near. He assures to do so, immediately after the marriage.

They search for the truck driver, but to no avail. Meanwhile, Nirmala finds Siva's bag with Subbiah through Kalyani, who mistakes the bag to be his. Subbiah's grief leads him to confess, taking the blame entirely to himself. He is arrested and the police does not take into consideration the story of the truck driver. Karuppu is left free of charge as Subbiah confessed even to his part. Karuppu continues with the search and tracks him down. Subbiah gets bail and both of them capture him. They learn that the crime was committed by Saamy – Siva's best friend since childhood.

Saamy is the local handyman of the village and the shutter operator of the dam's reservoir. During his childhood, his father had committed suicide in the dam, for the grief of his wife eloping with someone. Saamy had an eccentric odd character – aimless, unrelenting to act as per his wishes, lonely in his ways, but friendly with the village people. The villagers know him as a good fellow with a peculiar attitude. He had loved Nirmala since childhood, known to none – even to his best friend. He secretly admired her, even when she was engaged to Siva. On his visit, Siva called Saamy, who came with the truck driver, to take him home. In a fit of rage, Saamy attacks Siva. But the sight of the bus foiled his plans. The bus, while not hitting him, could not save him as Siva was taken by the truck driver who is unknown to both of them. Saamy along with the driver kill him, faking it as a suicide. Later, he pretends to be shocked by Siva's death and then turning violent at Subbiah while he made his confession.

Saamy tries to capture Nirmala and escape with her, but is cornered on top of the dam. He then holds Nirmala hostage to try to escape. With no way out and rejection from Nirmala (on learning about the facts), he jumps off the dam and commits suicide. In time, Subbiah is shown married to Kalyani, Nirmala got over Siva and is now married to Justin. Karuppu and Subbiah are now in different places. The end-credits shows them assigned together again on a common route to Kollimalai.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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Jannal Oram
Soundtrack album by
Released17 October 2013 (2013-10-17)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LanguageTamil
LabelTimes Music
ProducerVidyasagar
Vidyasagar chronology
Thalaivan
(2013)
Jannal Oram
(2013)
Geethaanjali
(2013)

The music was composed by Vidyasagar, who composed the original film, uniting with Karu Palaniappan for the sixth time.[4] Lyrics were penned by Yugabharathi.

  • "Ennadi Ennadi Oviyame" - Tippu, Vishal
  • "Aasa Vecha Manasula" - Tippu, Haricharan, Priya Himesh, Abhirami, Priyadarshini, Velmurugan
  • "Ele Malathoppu" - Anuradha Sriram, Velmurugan
  • "Unnai Paarkama" - Abhirami, Ceceille, Haricharan
  • "Athili Pathili" - K. Lakshman, Aravind, Rishi, Haresh, Aishwarya, Aswitha
  • "Aatho Apatho" - Bhoopalam Pragadeesh, Senthil

Behindwoods called it "joyride".[5] Milliblog wrote:"Karu Palaniappan’s record with Vidyasagar is fantastic but – disappointingly – only half-way through the soundtrack".[6]

Critical reception

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The film received mixed reviews.[7] Indiaglitz wrote: "Jannal Oram' is an interesting journey, which turns a thriller in the second half. Stopping by to take note of most of the small emotions and gestures we miss in our everyday rush, the film is an interesting tale of a humble small town".[8] Behindwoods wrote: "Palaniappan takes his own time to begin the actual film just before the interval and it is the post-interval block where all the drama happens and keeps you engaged fairly. The climax is also stretched more than necessary and when the suspense gets lengthened, it actually loses its purpose".[9] The Times of India wrote: "Overall, the film is competently put together and somewhat interesting but you cannot escape a lingering feeling that it should have been a little ambitious and much better".[10] Sify wrote: "The major problem with Jannal Oram a scene-by-scene remake of the original is the over-the top performances by lead actors, especially Parthipan. The director should have known that the likes of Parthipan and Prakashraj are past their sell-by dates and can only add to unwanted irritations and nuisances. A very similar irritating Sathyaraj seems to have realised it about himself and has stopped irritating audiences".[11]

Box office

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The film took average opening and grossed Rs. 4.50 crore in first week.[12]

References

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  1. ^ "Parthiban Kanavu director's next a remake". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  2. ^ "Shoot for Jannal Oram begins with puja". Sify. Archived from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  3. ^ Nikhil Raghavan (4 May 2013). "Etc: Natural bonding". The Hindu. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  4. ^ S. R. Ashok Kumar (26 October 2013). "Audio Beat: Jannal Oram - A fascinating journey". The Hindu. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  5. ^ "Jannal Oram aka Jannal Oram songs review". Behindwoods. 17 October 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  6. ^ Karthik (18 October 2013). "Jannal Oram (Music review), Tamil – Vidyasagar by Milliblog!". Itwofs.com. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  7. ^ "'Jannal Oram' Review Roundup: Vemal-Parthepan Film Gets Mixed Response - International Business Times". Ibtimes.co.in. 1 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  8. ^ "Jannal Oram Tamil Movie Review". IndiaGlitz. 30 November 2013. Archived from the original on 19 May 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  9. ^ "Jannal Oram (aka) Jannal Oram review". Behindwoods. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  10. ^ "Jannal Oram movie review: Wallpaper, Story, Trailer". The Times of India. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  11. ^ "Movie Review : Jannal Oram". Sify. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  12. ^ "Jannal Oram box office collection". Behindwoods. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
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